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Interview With Eastwood

WWC: Alright, let's get into this interview. First question: When did you start rapping?

Eastwood: Shit, like 95, 96.

WWC: What was you doing at that time?

Eastwood: Playing basketball, I was in high School, playing basketball for Inglewood high and shit. Cop 20 in California.

WWC: Alright, who would you say were your role models growing up?

Eastwood: Ah Shit, In the rap game as far as this music man, and being a leader man is uh, Tupac and uh, you know, just the other black leaders that stood up for what they believed in, like Dr. Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. Shit like that. Harriet Tubman, you know the whole lil black background.

WWC: Where were you recording before you signed to Death Row. Before you were stranded.

Eastwood: Shit, I was recording everywhere man, I was with an Independent label, Done Deal Records. You know, just an Independent label man. I was fucking with them for a minute and I signed to Death Row, I got a deal. So you know, I still fuck with them every now and then. But now I'm a Death Row artist, so you know, It's like that.

WWC: Speaking of Death Row, How exactly did you hook up with Tha Row? How'd you get stranded?

Eastwood: Ah shit, you know, my nigga was just buzzing and shit. Nigga heard about me while he was in the pen. He thought I was dope, found out I was from L.A. and I fuck with Kurupt and shit. And I rep this west coast shit man, and when he got out of jail I ended up running into him after the radio station and shit. After doing an interview at 100.3 The Beat. And shit they wanted to fuck with a nigga you know.

WWC: It clicked right at that moment?

Eastwood: YUP! It clicked there, first we had to have some more meetings you know. Get it all together. But yup it clicked and about a month after that.

WWC: And this was what year again?

Eastwood: This was two years ago. This was like 2001, 2002

WWC: Oh this was when he just got out.

Eastwood: Yeah, Yeah this was around 2001, 2002.

WWC: Alright now I know you down with Y.A. How did that come about and was it before or after you signed with Death Row?

Eastwood: Nah this was before I signed to Death Row. Y.A. is me and Roscoe, Kurupt, that's our camp. Bizzle, Capone, Tri, all them cats. Yeah I was doing this before I signed to Death Row man, Young Assassins man, know what I'm talking about. So it actually came about by Roscoe and his brother, you know shooting a video out here for the "girls all pause". And I went up there and me and Roscoe got into a lil battle in front of everybody. And they felt like we both was tight so, you know, our friendship built from there. We formed the group Y.A. Know what I"m talking about.

WWC: Alright we're going to kind of switch gears just for a second and uh we want to know what is your take on the Crooked I situation right now.

Eastwood: Ah man whatever it is, whatever he got going I wish him the best man. I ain't even tripping, I hope everything works for him. But Death Row still going to do our thing. We still going to do what we got to do, ride to a whole 'nother level man. So you know I'll see him on top, we'll see him on top. Good Luck

WWC: Can we speak on or in your words why he left?

Eastwood: ah man I have no idea why he left. It ain't my place. I don't know why that man left. I have no idea.

WWC: Well has that affected your relationship with him at all?

Eastwood: Ah nah nah man, you know. I don't really talk to him that much anyway, you know what I'm saying? I only see him when we got to do photo shoots, meet up and shit like that. Working shows and shit, I don't really see him that much. We didn't really have no cool relationship to where we just hung out all the time, you know and shit like that. You know what I'm saying, we don't really see each other.

WWC: There was also a rumor about spider beating down Sir Jinx, is there any truth to that?

Eastwood: Shit I don't know nothing about that man.

WWC: What projects are in the works at Death Row and Kustapo

Eastwood: We got the SMA album, we got my album coming out first after Kurupt's album. Eastwood the "Problem Child", after we got Eastwood Presents: SMA (Self Made Antourage). I got an album coming out after that, coming out under Kustapo. We got the Y.A. album coming out after that, that's coming out under Kustapo. We got a lot of stuff coming out.

WWC: Oh so Y.A. is signed to Kustapo?

Eastwood: Y.A. is Kustapo Orientated. We all in this together.

WWC: What about Danny Boy? There's a lot of people that are wondering how Danny Boy album sound.

Eastwood: Yeah Danny Boy album is tight just like mine. He almost done as a matter of fact. Coming together real good.

WWC: And he's up after you?

Eastwood: Yup, he's right up after me.

WWC: I'm assuming you'll be on Against Tha Grain (Kurupt's album). What would you say about the album from what you have heard from it so far?

Eastwood: Oh it's bangin, what you mean? It's tremendous. It's a tremendous amount of talent on that album. Shit it's crazy, it's bangin! It's all in house producers, all in house features. So you know it's bangin, all the records is bangin. I mean from 1 to 22, it's bangin! So I'm very proud of Kurupt, know what I mean? I'm on some hot songs on there, you know how that go.

WWC: Yeah you on it a grip huh?

Eastwood: Exactly! I got a song with Pac on there, so you know (whistles). I'm loving that.

WWC: Your Solo album, how's that coming along?

Eastwood: My album tight man. I'm like in the middle of it right now. It's going to be finished in another two weeks. Two, Three weeks at the most. I got about 10 more songs to do and I'm going to choose from 40 songs. I did about 40 songs.

WWC: Can you drop some of the names of the titles of the tracks?

Eastwood: A couple of them, only a couple of them an, know what I'm saying. I got "Nasty Girl". I got "Make Em Dance". I got "The Club is Packed". I got "Souljah Story". I mean it goes on. I got "Somewhere in the sky". I got a dedication to my grandmother. You know, I got a lot of songs on there man. Heat! WWC: It's going to be a banger? (playing Devil's Advocate)

Eastwood: Oh of course it's going to be a banger, and nothing less!

WWC: Who will guest appear on it?

Eastwood: I'm going to have some features on it. Of course I'm going to have my in-house (Death Row artists) Danny Boy, Kurupt, Roscoe, Capone, Tri. You know all my in-house guys on it. Know what I'm saying. Only outsider, I don't know, I might bring Scarface in. You know what I'm saying. I don't know man. Nas or something, I don't know man. I might do something like that. Know what I'm talking about.

WWC: What other projects are you currently working on?

Eastwood: I'm just trying to do a lot of these mixtapes man. Trying to flood the streets with these mixtapes, you know what I mean. I got a mixtape on YoungEastwood.com right now.

WWC: Speaking of Self Made, we heard about that label. can you speak on that a lil. Like who's signed and what other projects are coming out.

Eastwood: Oh yeah that's my label, and I got a couple of artists. Cutthroat, and Livewire, and I'm putting they album out. It will be out before Christmas.

WWC: is that like a Sub-set like Kustapo is to Death Row?

Eastwood: Exactly! You know, that's my independent label

WWC: Can you tell us a lil more on the mixtape you just dropped?

Eastwood: Shit only thing you need to know is that it's bangin man. We take all the hot shit off the radio man. Take all the hottest songs and do them over and make them hot. I got all my artists on there, so you know you can get a taste of that, know what I mean? See what they working with, where they coming from with this rap, know what I mean? An you know, Just get the world ready to hear more of me. You know?

WWC: I feel you. What do you think about the rap game? How you think that's doing right now?

Eastwood: The rap game is shitty for a lot of people! But I know for some people it's lovely. I think it's time for a change man, I thought the rap game changed, but you know it's obviously time for a whole new change. Know what I mean? And I think it's in need of some more real MC's to come in and not just rap about, you know my guns, and my jewelry, my car, my spinners, you know shit like that. We need more leaders to just step up and teach to you how to get it, how to get it the right way. What not to do, how not to bump they heads like you bumped yours. know what I mean, we need more positive rappers man. More people in better positions that's going to lead the way. The right way. Like I feel I know I'm one of those people. I'm in a position to lead the youth in the right way, and you know, do what I got to do. And I just be rapping about anything.

WWC: Your talking about icon status right?

Eastwood: Right.

WWC: Do you think the rap game will have any changes when Suge is Released and yours and Kurupt's album drops?

Eastwood: Of course there will be some changes. The games going to change and the light is going to be on us, as well as whoever we share that light with. It's about that time. We past due for it, you know, some type of success now on Death Row. I mean this man been going through all kinds of stuff with the law and the artists, you know, they leaving and coming back, and leaving, and coming, and never coming back and getting new artists and all this shit. It's time for something to happen really positive on Death Row. You know, something positive happened before and that's why I know it can happen again. So, we just going to make history twice with the team that we got, and play team ball. Know what I mean?

WWC: You've had beef in the past with like Snoop and Daz. Is there anymore beef at the moment or anyone you going against?

Eastwood: Well shit you know Daz, I'm just not cool with homie, and I don't know that nigga like that anyways. So you know I'm just not cool with that nigga. I ain't even tripping of that cat, know what I mean. And Snoop, I met him a couple of times before. We done hung out, smoke weed, shit like that. He straingt, Know what I mean? That nigga just dissed Death Row, I'm on Death Row. So you know it's either I'm going to bend over and get fucked or say something back. It ain't even about dissing man. A nigga just holla at them cats when we see them. And like however we feel like, you know, we want to do it when we see each other, we just do it. Like men you know what I'm saying?

WWC: Mm-hmm

Eastwood: Yup! It's like that so, you know I don't got beef with nobody, feel me? I ain't got no beef with nobody. If a nigga got beef with me he hating. Nigga's just hating because I don't got no beef with nobody homie. So you know, I ain't fin to let a nigga talk down on me though, and about my label, put it on records, and you know, feel like he just going to shut down my career. Know what I mean? It's not going to happen man.

WWC: Speaking of Daz, Did Daz's Wife and Snoop's mom really sue Tha Row over that diss song you did on Dysfunktional Family, "Tha Row (Y'all Hoes)"

Eastwood: Oh I don't even know man, I don't have no idea. I don't know if it was just a rumor or what, I have no idea.

WWC: We interviewed Daz a while ago and he gave us some story about Kurupt on some R. Kelly trip. Now since you worked in the past with Daz is there anything like that you want to share with us about him?

Eastwood: I don't even know the nigga like that man. I don't want to tell you nothing about that nigga. I don't even want to talk about that nigga. I ain't even tripping off that nigga, my nigga. For real. Like I said with the Daz and the Snoop situation homie. It's whenever we see each other we handle it from there. I ain't trippin off that old, 'keep talking about them niggas, baggin on them niggas, telling jokes and all that old shit, clownin'. fuck all that, know what I mean? Because if we see each other weÀÀll holla about that shit. Only thing I can tell you about Daz, Is Daz is immature homie. Nigga need to grow up, simple as that. Talented nigga man, but the nigga need to grow up know what I'm saying? That nigga will be alright whether he get his ass whooped, killed, locked up, however, that nigga will be alright.

WWC: What are your Plans for the future?

Eastwood: Shit to make money, and get more. Know what I mean, and hold the west down. And give the west somebody that they can: smile at, sit back, relax, smoke a blunt, put in work, get drunk, fuck hoes, whatever. I want to give them for every occasion.

WWC: Alright. Right now we going to do this thing we do at WWC. It's a Word Association. So I'm going to say a few names or words and you just tell me the first thing that comes to you mind when you hear it. Alright?

Eastwood: Yeah

WWC: Alright. The Realest.

Eastwood: Fake

WWC: Eminem.

Eastwood: A bitch

WWC: Above The Law.

Eastwood: They tight.

WWC: G-Unit.

Eastwood: Uh.. I don't know what to... The niggas you love to hate!

WWC: Ras Kass.

Eastwood: Ras Kass, That's my nigga. He call ER, he tight, that's my nigga. Can't wait till he put out another album.

WWC: Dr. Dre.

Eastwood: Dre! Shit, man fuck with your peoples man. Reach out to your westcoast artists man. You got a lot of niggas out here man, who are really out here rappin. Reach out to your peoples man and stop signing these racists and shit man, know what I'm talkin about? But he dope though, he dope on the tracks. He just need to keep it a lil more realer with his folks but he alright though.

WWC: Royce 5'9.

Eastwood: Who? Who is that? Never heard of him.

WWC: Alright we'll skip that one... The Internet.

Eastwood: Oh yeah the Internet, Oh shit what about it? Oh YoungEastwood.com

WWC: Boo Yaa TRIBE.

Eastwood: Oh they straight, them my guys. They cool

WWC: Bootleggers.

Eastwood: Fuck em!

WWC: Gail Gotti

Eastwood: The home girl.

WWC: Suge Knight.

Eastwood: That's my homeboy.

WWC: 2Pac.

Eastwood: My Idol.

WWC: And Lastly, yourself, Eastwood.

Eastwood: One of the realest niggas walking man. I got to Show the world homie, I got to show the world. I'm one of the realest niggas walking. A nigga who's going to touch the game man. From a whole 'nother perspective, in a real way. A real solid, down to earth, humble brother, down to go down for his people. A family man, know what I mean? That's Eastwood.

WWC: I feel you. Well basically that wraps up this interview we got here. I'd like to take this time to thank you. All them niggas on Death Row, everyone.

Eastwood: Fa sho my nigga, fa sho! I say good looking out.

WWC: Cool, is there anything you want to say to the people out there before we end this?

Eastwood: Ah yeah man, Know what I mean. For those who got they ear tuned in to Eastwood man, Keep your ear tuned, stay to the streets. Ah shit, I'm out here, here I come. I'm about to do it on a whole 'nother positive note. So if you down with a nigga like me, I'm down with a nigga like you. Let's get it Crackin!


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While Ghostface is anticipating his Def Jam debut with the release of Pretty Tony he recently sat down with Vibe to discuss his album, the rap game and various other subjects. Below are some excerps from the interview where Ghost speaks candidly on Eminem and others.

Vibe: Where do you think you rank among today's MCs?

Ghostface: Fuck who's the best. niggas can have the title. I just wanna do what I do, and from that, show and prove where I stand. It's all an illusion anyway. I don't care if this dude sold 10 millon or 11 million. You got Eminem who sold crazy . But do niggas look at him as the best rapper? Then again, you got white America that might look at him as the best muthafuckin' rapper.

How do you look at Eminem?

I don't look at him as the best. Why, because he sold however many million? Don't get me wrong, he's a nice MC - he can rhyme his ass off. But I'm into pure hip hop. I'm into real shit. You got a handful of niggas out there than can get busy. I don't wanna say no names, 'cause I don't wanna get a lot of other niggas upset.

I know before 50 Cent blew up, you were sniping at each other.

Nah, he's doing his thing. It was alll destined. If it wasn't meant for him, then he wouldn't be there. Hopefully, he knows it's a blessing and cherishes it.

Everybody knows 50's story, but it may not be widely known that you've also been locked up for attempted robbery and shot before - once in your neck.

Yeah I got shot three times. I've been at group homes, and in' Rikers, and all that other shit. I never been up north though. But he came at the right time, and everything was meant to happen. Plus, what I went through, a lot of people go through in life. I don't put my business out there like that, unless I'm asked. Other than that, I keep everything hush.


I heard you stopped smoking weed last year.

I cut all that out. I might take a few drinks here and there. I've been in the sober world.


What would it take to start a movement to change hip hop?

If we all vouched to do it for the babies. If you're not willing to put down that burner for your babies, that means you don't give a fuck about your seeds or my seeds. Then fuckyou! It's niggas like you I still gotta keep holding my toast for. If niggas all agreed to leave the gangsta shit alone for a couple years, that might be the sprout of a revolution.

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BeitragVerfasst: 16.04.2004, 21:55 
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Scipio: Man Up
By Damainion Ewell


How often do you see one man willing to shoulder the burden of returning the West Coast back to Hip-Hop immortality? The man that has the talent and the gumption to take on such a venture has yet to even sign a major record deal. Scipio (pronounced SIP-PEE-OH) has thus far shown that the backing of a major label is not exactly necessary to get mainstream appeal.

Flaunting endorsements from K-Swiss, Meoshe, and bleeding the confidence that is required to make a dent in this industry, Scipio has laid his cards on the table and dares anyone to “re-up.” In a recent discussion with Allhiphop.com., he discussed his burgeoning career, how he plans to bring California Hip-Hop back to the promised land, and big plans that lie ahead, all of which includes the currently incarcerated Ras Kass. West Up!

Allhiphop.com: Your name seems to be attracting a lot of attention in California. Talk about what you have got in the works right now.

Scipio: The mixtape came out and it did real good, man. The single (Work Wit It) was playing on Power 106 and 100.3 The Beat (Los Angeles), which is big because I’m unsigned. You never see unsigned artists come out like that, you know?

Allhiphop.com: I’ve heard on several occasions that 100.3 The Beat has all the makings of a bureaucracy. How tough was it for you to get the single on the air, especially being unsigned like you previously mentioned?

Scipio: I’ve been hustling for a minute, dog. I hosted a Sunkist tour, and it was held in L.A. Sunkist hired The Beat one year and they hired Power another year. A lot of people know me through the streets, like when me and Ras (Kass) used to go the station when he had his radio interviews. We used to go up there and freestyle and s**t like that. But, I knew a lot of people that I met on my own when I was hosting the tour. They liked me as a person on top of what I did as an artist. It’s just building those relationships, and those relationships are the most important.

Allhiphop.com: That is very true, because you never know who has the juice to get things pushed through at these major radio outlets.

Scipio: There are a lot of good people up there, though. They show a lot of love up there.

Allhiphop.com: What type of buzz and responses have you gotten personally from the single?

Scipio: I’ve gotten big responses from the single, man. We are in the #2 market out here in L.A., and for them to be spinning my s**t is big. I’m dirt hustling, man, me and my folks. I think the most spins I reached in L.A. was 20 spins in a week.

Allhiphop.com: That should not be taken lightly because you do not have the major machine pushing for favors from the programming directors.

Scipio: That’s a blessing.

Allhiphop.com: Do you have any words you can offer about the new upcoming album?

Scipio: I got a banger I’m about to beat muthaf**kas over the head with real soon. Probably around June or July, somewhere in there. I’m working with some multi-platinum producers also on some real love s**t.

Allhiphop.com: My publication interviewed Ras Kass sometime ago, and he said “He's not my protégé for one, he's his own man, he's just a good cat that ain't a snake, I try to keep good company around me, good energy. I'm really happy man 'cause he got the talent, and he ain't gotta fall into the pitfalls that I fell into.”* Describe the real relationship between you and Ras, because I am sure a lot of people just think you came up underneath him.

Scipio: Ras is like my brother, man. He’s a real ni**a, and he’s going to shoot it straight. He ain’t the type of ni**a that’s going to get his s**t off and keep a ni**a stationary. He always put me up on game, and he’s been like a mentor to me. He never hid anything from me, and every time we used to go out and do shows, he dropped change in my pocket. That’s on some love s**t. He basically showed me the ropes to the other side of the game. He shed some light on a lot of my perspective on the industry. Our relationship goes beyond Hip-Hop, man. We own a company together, so we are going to get this money, work together and all of that. Allhiphop.com: Do you think the West Coast is in a slumber in terms of the quality of Hip-Hop they are putting out right now? Scipio: I don’t think we are in a slumber, but right now it’s all about rebuilding. Like down South, they are just starting back getting hot, and they have been doing their thing, banging them out. They are staying unified and all of that. You have to reinvent yourself every so often, and Hip-Hop itself has to reinvent itself. That’s what we are doing right now. We’ve got a pretty cool grasp on it, and I know all the young spitters that’s coming up. They all know me as well, so we’re about to build it back. No one man can bring the West back by himself. It’s taking unity, and that’s what I’m seeing right now, so it’s a whole new West, you know what I’m saying?

Allhiphop.com: When you finally get that major deal with the multi-million dollar budget, what artists and producers are looking forward to working with first?

Scipio: I haven’t hashed that out yet, but I’m the type of person that likes to grow with people, you know what I’m saying? The people that showed me love when I didn’t have s**t, that’s who I’m looking to f**k with when I got s**t. Of course, I might need some big name production, but I feel like the people I’m dealing with can give me that right now.

Allhiphop.com: I am sure you are aware that Aftermath is the biggest label on Earth. The roster just got deeper with the signing of Eve and Busta Rhymes, and alongside 50 and Eminem, they look like they cannot be stopped. Do you believe that you can thrive in that type of environment?

Scipio: They are the Lakers or the Yankees, take your pick. I’d feel ultimately comfortable in that environment just for the simple fact that I bring my own light to the table. I’m different. I’m not your average guy. Everybody has their own story to tell, and I have mine. Aside from that, it’s been shown that if you’re surrounded by successful people, you in turn will be successful. It’s all in due time, man. The only way truly talented people don’t succeed is if they quit. I gave up a college scholarship for football for this rap s**t.

Allhiphop.com: What exactly are you trying to do to bring a new perspective and light to West Coast Hip-Hop?

Scipio: Basically, my music is going to speak for itself. Everything under the sun has been said; it’s just about how you say it and how you are going to tell your story. I’m trying to bring about the new West Coast with unity and love amongst us West Coasters. We have to rep for each other, man. I’ll reiterate that I’ve seen a lot of unity thus far in the game. It’s about me getting my foot in the door, and once I get comfortable, I’ll provide ways for my homeboys to eat, my family to eat, and put jobs in the street.

Note to the fans: For those who wish to purchase Scipio’s mixtape, please send an email to scipiomixtape@raskass-central.com.

*Excerpt taken from “Ras Kass: Get Free Or Die Trying Pt. 2,” Allhiphop.com, February, 2004

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K-Rino Interview...ratet mal wers gemacht hat. Zweimal dürft ihr :cool:

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1. Why did you call yourself K-Rino? Has it a special meaning?

1.the name k-rino is a name i've carried since i was a young cat back in
elementry
school.as i got older and into the rap game the initials developed.the
meaning is
K illa
R hymes
I ntellectually
N ullifying
O pponents

2. How did you get into Hip-Hop and what were your influences? Do you have any idols?

2.i came into hip hop from just growing up hearing the old school legends
from back in the day when i was a little g. sugar hill gang,kurtis blow and all
those guys
inspired me to wanna do this.the idols i have mostly come from other fields
of entertainment or sports or social activists,such as Minister Farrakhan,but
musically i love prince,sam cooke,stevie wonder.they are geniuses in their
fields.i still have much love and respect for RUN-DMC,KRS-ONE,magic
johnson,dolemite,richard pryor.those are my idols

3. What do you think how you have changed since you were in the group Real Chill in 1986?

3.i 've matured as a person and an artists,i was young then.16 or 17 years
old.i didnt know the music business like i know it now.i wasnt as good lyrically
as i am now.everything was new to me then,now i've just about seen it all and
done it all.those days were a training period for me.now im a soldier in this
game.

4. ...and how has Hip-Hop changed?

4.hip hop has changed alot since then.there was only a handful of groups out
at that time.rap was considered by some to be a fad that would fade out
soon.now its a billion dollar industry,thats has been manipulated by the mainstream
media and the major labels for profit.the art of hip hop is highly
commercialized in every aspect of american and world society.(tv ads,clothing,movies
etc.)the art form has been diluted and the real message has been lost in the
process.the conscience rapper has been intentionally pushed to the bottom of the
list and the nonsense has been elevated.now the people only focus on
materialism,partying,sex and drugs,and this is portrayed all over the radio and tv in the
name of hip hop.

5. Who was the first rapper you was working with?

5.the 1st rapper i ever worked with was my homie m.c. ice,he was a little
better than me at the time and we formed a partnership and i learned alot from
him because he was more in tune with what was hot and what was not.later i met a
guy from new york named t-mack-t who really showed me the battle side of hip
hop and i patterned myself after him.he was the 1st rapper i knew personally
that i looked up to that wasnt famous.

6. What was the reason for you to found the South Park Coalition, how did you meet the members?

6.i started the south park coalition because i wanted a whole organization of
m.c.s,not just a group.alot of us were at war back in the days,and i wanted
to unite the rappers in my hood and my city.i met each member here and there
over the years,at talent shows and clubs.we all used to battle one another,the
hate turned into respect after a while and we became friends and click'd up
together.

7. When does "The Hit List" come out? Do you have any other projects to work on, like another SPC-Album?

7.the hitt list might not be coming out any time soon,once again i ran into
problems with the label i was dealing with and the album is sitting up on
hold.hopefully things will be resolved and the cd will drop one day.the latest spc
album is called "packin heat".its in stores now.and also available online thru
us,www.southparkcoalition.com but there won't be another spc album any time
soon.i have 3 projects on the shelf now ."ten year run" is out and available,i
have an album called "family bizness" dropping may 4th,and then a brand new
solo album coming in june or july called "fear no evil".

8. What's your opinion on the hip-hop situation right now, like 50 Cent or Lil' Jon bein' that famous and popular?

8.i dont have a problem with them being popular,i support those brothers to
the fullest and wish them much success and money.i have a problem with the
industry
pushing only the negative content to the forefront,and not focusing on the
positive things that those guys do as well.

9. How did the death of DJ Screw change your life? As what did you see him?

9.it hurt me personally and it hurt me from a musical standpoint.he was a
friend of mine.somebody that i had known since we were 15-16 years old at
sterling high school.long before he blew up.he always was the same dude.if you had'nt
ever heard of screw and met him somewhere,you wouldnt know he was a star like
he was because he was so humble.you got cats out here these days who aint did
nothin' in the rap game but put out a little piece of trash on a cd and they
act like they invented the game.i hate arrogance,and fools whos think that
they are susperstars.i dont care how many records you sold,when a fan approaches
you to show love then you diss um or act like you're too good for um, then i
dont sympathize when you have a downfall.screw was the man out here but he
never turned his nose up on a fan or anybody else for that matter.now you got cats
out here who have capitalized off of screw's invention and are making big
money.but i think that what's getting lost in all this is the person that screw
was.so my advice to those who are slowin' it down and choppin' it up and
benefitting from it,is to not just duplicate screw's music and invention,but they
should also duplicate his heart and his humility and the way he showed love for
everyone because thats why he was blessed so much.many people have talent but
GOD amplifies your blessings when you have a good heart to go with your talent.

10. Which albums were the most important releases outta Houston, the classics?

10.the most important release from houston was the geto boys album that had
the song "my minds playing tricks on me".that song put houston on the map
nationally and internationally.i traveled alot during that period and was able to
see 1st hand the impact of that song and the popularity of the geto boys.the
album "grip it on that other level" started it but "we cant' be stopped"set it
off and gave houston an identity
ganksta nip's "south park pyscho" would be on the list as well.he started a
genre of rap called horrocore and brought something that no one had ever seen
before.then i would give credit to lil ke ke' "dont mess with texas". these are
classics that set trends in motion,and influenced masses in houston and the
world.

11. What's your opinion on Ganksta NIP's newest release?

11.i know it wasnt his best work but nip knows that too.me and him always
talk about
"the old nip". and every now and then i tell him to turn into the old nip.but
what people gotta realize is that.nip is a different man.he's a very
spiritual man who loves GOD and he wants to relay better messages in his music these
days.the people who want him to kill,kill,on every song dont care about him as
person,but in the rap game you have a responsibility to teach and help people
thru your music wether you like it or not.so we have to use that influence to
better a condition,not to make it worse.but nip is one of the best rappers i
ever met.he made me better and i owe alot of my career to him.so anyone who
criticizes him gotta deal with me too.

12. Why didn't he was on the "Packin' Heat"-Album?

12.he wasnt on packin heat because that album started out as an "underground".
it was never intended to hit the stores.so the people who were on it were
just spc members who were around each other daily at the time.it was really just
thrown together in a "pre-production mode".its so many of us and we do so many
projects that its impossible for all of us to be on every project.but from
the fan's point of view they want to see all the members on every album,it
doesnt always work like that.if he was around or wanted to be on a song of course
he would be on it.but its always gonna be times when some of us aint on albums
or songs.its spc songs that i aint even heard before.then i hear um and im
like"when did yall record this?' its all good though,we just wanna keep
workin'.me and nip have even talked about doing an album together,but we both are busy
doing out thang so if its meant to be it'll happen.

13. What do you think of Z-Ro's newest release "The Life Of Joseph W. McVey"?

13.its classic z-ro.a real nice album with relateable topics.

14. What do you think generally of the Guerilla Maab?

14.the guerilla maab are in my top 3 houston groups of all time along with
street military and the geto boys.all of um are my young homies and i got their
backs to the fullest.

15. What rapper would you still like to work with? Doesn't matter if he's livin' or dead.

15.i'd like to work with krs-one,t-la rock.run dmc,too short,and the homie
face.

16. Which song do you think of being your best?

16.i couldnt say.i would want to ask GOD that question.i'd wanna know which
one of my songs has had the most positive influence on people overall, and
since i dont know which song that is,only GOD knows.whatever song he chooses.i'll
say thats my "best" song.now my "favorite" song ,thats a different story.i
couldnt tell you that one either because it changes from album to album.

17. Please leave short comments on:

2Pac:curious to see what he'd be like if he was still alive.would he
still have the following and impact that he did when he died.

K-Rino:just an average cat trying to build a legacy in this game and make a
dollar doing it.

Geto Boys:the reason houston has a hip hop scene,they came along at a time
when
no one gave anybody any respect unless they were from the east coast or the
west coast.and they still made it happen and influenced the rest of the country
and the small music markets to beleive they could do it too.

Rap-A-Lot Records:the pioneer of independent hip hop labels.j-prince started
something that was unheard of at the time.didnt kiss the major lables' ass to
get a hook up.put out the kind of music they wanted to.didnt kiss the radio
stations' ass.
and became the blueprint for all others that came after him.and doesnt get
nearly the credit that he deserves.his name should be mentioned with
puffy,master p,russell simmons and who ever else you can name.because with the exception
of russel simmons,he was there before all of them.

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bißchen kurz, aber :thumbs:

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Face97 hat geschrieben:
bißchen kurz, aber :thumbs:


danke. war auch bloß per email und dafür isses find ich gut geworden, auch schön dass er sich die zeit genommen hat so ausgiebig zu antworten :thumbs:


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richtig nice..


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LA THE DARKMAN INTERVIEW!

Wu-Corp: Where did you grow up? What was the neighborhood like?

LA: Crown Heights,Brookln ny its a real hood bordered by bed stey & flatbush its ghetto!


Wu-Corp: How many years you been writing/MC'ing?

LA: I been writting 10yrs since I was kid!


Wu-Corp: Whats your favorite Wu-Tang songs?

LA: Cream, Its yours, triump


Wu-Corp: Who In the Wu Clan are you most close with?

LA: Rza Gza & Mef just cause we see each other more but I'm cool with everybody!


Wu-Corp: Why did u choose 'LA the Darkman' as your rap name?

LA: My name Lason La for short & I'm a very Darkman talking pigmentation!


Wu-Corp: Give us the 411 on your crew the Sing Sing Killaz...

LA: SSK that's the Gang, you'll here from em on my album!


Wu-Corp: what are your influences in music? you seem to have a jamacian vibe with your music, where does that stem from?

LA: I mainly influenced myself but I liked mc such as Rakim,Krs One,Slick Rick,Chuck D, the jamaican side is from my pops his father my grandfather is from kingston, that's the vibe its real!


Wu-Corp: Who would u like to work with outside of Wu?

LA: I would like to work with Alicia keys 4 sho!


Wu-Corp: How did the connection with Vanilla Ice come about?

LA: I connected with Ice on the hip hop witch movie set, he said he liked my album & he wanted to polly with me we linked up & I ghost wrote a couple songs in texas with him!


Wu-Corp: Other than being an mc, have you experimented with production at all? If not, any plans to?

LA: Na I executive produce as far as sounds but I might one day


Wu-Corp: What do you expect to be different in DarkmanII compared to heist of a century?

LA: D2 is crazy,its mature,its potten,pure,the Heist was for then D2 is for now


Wu-Corp: Give us the low down on Darkman II...

LA: My beats are stupid,I got the best producers Carlos 6th July Broady,Rza,Havoc,Alchemist,premier,pete rock & shotti from sing sing killahs!


Wu-Corp: What record label will It come out on?

LA: D2 is on my own label SSR ent. I'm setting it off!


Wu-Corp: Got a release date for It yet?

LA: I haven't finished the hole album yet I'm still adding & subtracting beat as I count down still adding producers, I'm dropping a wax single 2 songs, may 1st in wax stores everywhere, I'ma drop 2 singles before the album, wax in stores may 1st!


Wu-Corp: Which artists In hip hop are you feeling right now?

LA: Really I'm listening to old albums like Ice cube 1st lp, Jay-z 1st lp, Nas 1st lp, Methodmans 1st lp & Raekwons 1st lp!


Wu-Corp: What was the last album you bought?

LA: Jay-z black lp


Wu-Corp: How did you hook up with Havoc from the Mobb?

LA: Me and mobb deep hooked up at the freeknic in atlanta just wildin out reppin ny, then we linked up back in ny in the studio fa the soul assissin lp, I told Havoc I want some beats he said he fell my joints we did it that's fam


Wu-Corp: Do you battle alot?

LA: Yea I came up battling that's how I got my strips so I stay loaded & cocked!


Wu-Corp: You seem to work good on a track with Killah Sin... you given any thought to a Meth N Red duo style album?

LA: I don't know I'm a solo artist so I'm greedy with the mic, but I don't know I'm just working!


Wu-Corp: How did you hook up with Primo?

LA: I know Guru from way back in brookln so its nothing.


Wu-Corp: You still tight with 6th July?

LA: Yea 6th got 3 beats on my new lp, that's my man!


Wu-Corp: How did you get in "Da Hip-Hop Witch Project

LA: My peeps called me for a casting call I recited the script, the picked me I played the street don,regular


Wu-Corp: Give us some EXCLUSIVE info?

LA: Darkman 2 is feat. Methodman,Rza, & a few other suprises don't want to tell is all D2 is crazy I will say that


Wu-Corp: Any last words to the fans out there?

LA: Holla at the God!

Check LA's official web site out @ www.lathedarkman.com


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^^^

also der fasst sich ja mal kürzer als kurz ... :thumbdown:

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chainsnatcha hat geschrieben:
^^^

also der fasst sich ja mal kürzer als kurz ... :thumbdown:


aber ehrlich


Wu-Corp: How did you hook up with Primo?

LA: I know Guru from way back in brookln so its nothing

^^AHA


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Auf www.hiphopheads.tk gibts ein neues Audio Interview mit X-Ray und ein Interview mit Megalon, per Brief...


Hatte gar keine Ahnung dass der zur Zeit hinter Gittern sitzt :notsure:

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Interview with The Alchemist - Part One




MARTY( Interviewer): What's good?

ALCHEMIST: Everything's good, man. Just enjoying life, you know?

M: You are mainly a producer, but you rap on some tracks as well. If you had to put yourself in a category, what would it be? Producer? Rapper? All-around artist?

A: I would put myself in the all-around artist category, you know what I mean? Pick up a paintbrush, pick up a pen, pick up a fuckin...you know what I mean? Whatever, you know what I'm saying? Whatever it takes to create. So you know, its an extension into different categories. More or less, I make my name on the beat level, you know what I mean, but I've been rapping since before I was making beats so its just an extension of creativity, you know what I mean?

M: How long do you see yourself producing? Forever?

A: It'll grow. I'm sure it'll grow. I'm still, like to me I feel like I'm still young so I know it'll develop into something more, like I went from rapping to making beats, it'll grow. I look at people like Rick Rubin and shit, who are just super-creative and they grow, you know what I mean? I'm sure this shit will grow into something, I'm just letting it take its natural progression, you know?

QUIS: When you first came out, when you were building a name for yourself, you were doing tracks with Dilated [Peoples}, Third Degree, Confidence, know what I'm saying? Buc Fifty, them type of cats, and Casual. You took it over to the Mobb sound after that, and killed it. Was it a big transition from west to east?

A: Nah, I don't think so. I think like I said its just kind of like a progression, you know. Musically, the people you're around influence you, know what I mean? So it was like I started being around Mobb Deep a lot, for it to be more than just one record, know what I mean? If it had been just one record and move on it might have been just the outcome of the music industry, but we ended up hooking up, actually it was Muggs [of Cypress Hill] who connected me with them, Muggs was working with them on god bless the dead named Bigga B, he was around, a big force on the west coast he was working with Muggs at the time, and you know made different connections through Muggs, started doing stuff with Mobb. Once I moved to New York, it just kinda snowballed into that, so while I was doing the Dilated, the High and Mighty, and the Buc Fifty, I was building my relationships up, you know what I mean, and the Mobb thing was kinda slow, it was like it started with me just bringing beat CDs and then they started seeing out, cause I was in New York kinda by myself representing Soul Assasins, I was the only dude out here, you know, everybody else, Muggs, everybody, was on the west coast, so like me being out here by myself, they just peeped that and it was like, kept being around them more and more and I just started grinding out more, just doing more shit, and it eventually, you know, it developed more than just a beatmaking thing, and thats when the best music comes out.

M: What kind of relationship do you have with Havoc?

A: [Points to MPC 3000] That's his MP right there, so that pretty much tell you, you know what I mean? We keep it tight man, I'm one of his motivational forces, and hes definetley one of my motivational forces, I just gotta hear the shit hes working on, you know what I mean? He's sick...unspoken beat genius, you know what I'm saying? I feel like he's more natual, like he don't gotta think too hard when he makes beats, he kinda just goes off, know what I mean, like me I use more thought, I be trying to figure out sometimes..you know what I mean? He's just so natural he's just in it man, I'll be having to work harder to get to that level I feel, you know what I mean? So me and his relationship is just like that you know, we click, he plays me shit I play shit for him, give each other opinions, ideas, you know, and I'm one of the few people I know that, even in their camp, where I can just bring beats to him and he'll just pick up a pen and start scripting and it won't be nothing, you know, it won't be like I have to call the manager or nothing, thats the good relationship we have, and also on a level where you know sometimes they [Mobb Deep] get mad when I give beats to other people, you know what I mean? So its like anytime I'm playing them new beats, their quick to pick up a pen and try to lock that beat down, you know what I mean?

Q: When you make beats, do you have separate batches for different artist, or do you just make them...

A: Definitely, I mean I'll plan certain ones for different people but they don't always end up that way, know what I'm saying, but I'll definitely be like, structure a beat CD like "I'm gonna put this one first, this second, I hope they like this." Those end up being the ones people pick sometimes, you never know.

Q: Most cats when they do beats, they have joints on the album and all that, but your beats nowadays are really starting to take off like Saigon's "Stalking Cap," "Book of Rhymes" (Nas), "Tick Tock," your songs are starting to stand out, like the Big Daddy Kane song ("The Man the Icon" 12"). What happened to that album [Big Daddy Kane's album]?

A: Never happened man. It was a situation with Landspeed, where there's a defunct label, some bullshit. You know, me and Kane we were clicking, that's my man, I look up to him incredibly, you know what I mean, just like what he did. He lives in North Carolina, I'm over here, we were just working on different stuff. We did a couple records and shit but nothing that was...you need to keep working...it was some big shoes to fill if I'm gonna do a whole Big Daddy Kane album you know what I mean, so we just ended up not doing it for one reason or another. But, he's still my man, know what I mean, we'll probably still do some shit in the future.

Q: Like as far as production aspects, when you cats like Kanye...my thing is like, as far as your digging process...the samples are more up-close now, a lot of cats know the records their using. But cats like Preme [DJ Premier], Pete [Rock], you, Diamond, stay digging, you know what I'm saying? Joints like Kanye uses the soul sample, its like when you do it, on the 'Stalking Cap' joint, the vocal samples, like the joint you did on the State Property 2 album, 'Still In Effect'..

A: Oh yeah..

Q: It's crazy.

A: That was a Freeway song for his album that they turned into that. That was supposed to be on his solo album.

Q: Yeah. As far as digging, do you still go at it hard?

A: Hell yeah, hell yeah. Stay digging, everyday. There's always an idea or a thought...I gone shopping so much over the years that I could just go through my closet too, just dig through my shit cause I stay buying, so it's like you could never really know a record from top to bottom, there's always something new on a record, you know? Go back through, find shit, I'm buying CDs these days, like 'Stalking Cap' I found that on a CD. That wasn't even on a vinyl. It doesn't exist on a vinyl, certain records you can't even find until they just reissue it on CD. It's still an element of digging, you know what I mean? I think that...if your not getting your fingers dirty physically, it don't mean your not digging, you know what I mean? Like people today, I've been hearing a lot of people saying "What do you think about this new shit where kids can just download an old sample, they can get a virtual drum machine and they just make the beat and they download and this and that and you have a whole beat and so on." I say, if it sounds good, its good. If they're still doing their homework, they still finding out about songs and they're finding out through the internet, whatever your formula is to find out as long as your doing your history, your finding shit out, cause it always [revolves around digging], the more your knowledgeable about stuff. It also goes along with when your producing, like lets say your like trying to come up with a vocal sample for a chorus or you wanna scratch something- you gotta have a knowledge of all those old rap songs. Like, "Oh yeah I'll take that line from KRS.." You know like say the name of a song is something, you can go in the Rolodex in your head and go "yeah so-and-so said that line or that word in a rhyme in '89 in a song," you know? Just to have that knowledge, is part of production too as well, or like say you want to find a sound...all that shit goes along with digging, you know? Young cats today, these new kids doing mixtapes and stuff..an older dude will be having more creative shit because they have the knowledge of all the stuff that they play with, you know what I mean?

M: In terms of soul sampling, you hear a lot about Kanye West and Just Blaze, bringing the soul sampling back. But I feel like you've been a big part of that as well. Do you feel like you've gotten credit for that, or does it mean anything to you to get credit for that?

A: It's cool that you bring that up too because people who know me amongst the circle, we all know that shit, you know what I mean? It's just something we don't really blow up too much cause I don't wanna sound like the obvious..But if you really wanna trace it back man, I got that shit from Muggs. Muggs was the original Stacks-sampling, he used to sample from those Memphis records, he was big on that Memphis soul, like down south soul, know what I mean, but it was more funky. They reach into other categories of soul..I mean Muggs did it, RZA did it, obviously Just and Kanye took it to a whole other level, you know, cause they were working with artists like Jay and stuff that was just heard by the masses, you feel me? That's why I feel like the Blueprint album [Jay-Z] was a good turning point, and after that, every label and every A&R will tell you that a million beat CDs from kids with all these vocal samples and shit, like it was just following a trend. But if you really do the math, you could listen to the H.N.I.C. album [Prodigy of Mobb Deep], when I did that shit on that song with Pee and his girl, it was called "Trials of Love," and that was a Lou Bond (?) record that I used, and then at the end of the song, the whole song plays out, with the singing, and its like we been doing that. Me and Pee always laugh about that like, we been doing this shit, its all good. Also, not for nothing, when the Blueprint album was going down.You know my man is an A&R at Roc-A-Fella, Hip Hop. [He's] been over there forever, now hes much bigger than that. In the beginning he was doing A&R and...I was around when they were doing Blueprint 1, I was coming by Baseline [Roc-A-Fella Studios], bringing beat CDs. I knew what they were up to, I heard a couple of the songs, I saw where they were going, I was like "oh perfect." Right up my alley. I had that shit for em, and I was coming through there playing beats, and..you know....now I realize what was happening, you know what I'm saying? Cause there was one particular incident when Kanye was there..Kanye West is my man, I love him and I'm just proud of the shit he's done and how he just went with his game, you know? But I mean, he knows what time it is, you know without me going and breaking it all down cause...None of my beats were making the Blueprint 1 album, and then when the album came out I'm like...there was a lot of shit that sounded like..it wasn't straight up the same sample, it was just the influence, it was the same sound I had. I had that sound at that time, you know what I'm saying? And the fact that I wasn't getting on that album I realized down the line, they were managing Kanye at the time, you know what I'm saying? So they was having me bring beats through and it was like, "Yea we like #2, we like #5, put it on CD," and I would leave, and they was playing em for him [claps for emphasis] and whoever else they were managing, Just [Blaze] like..."This is what you gotta top out. You don't want us to give this to Jay do you?" Like they weren't making money off of Alchemist, so it was like, these dudes they were managing..it was pretty much the same similar sound, they knew he [Kanye] could make beats of that status, you know what I'm saying? So they was kind of like, using me as fuel for his fire, which was smart, know what I'm saying? I didn't realize it at the time, I probably wouldn't even have been leaving beat CDs over there, you know? I got good by listening to Premo..like everybody got good by trying to analyze somebody, so if he was analyzing me to a little bit at that point, that's cool. I know for a fact without getting into details cause me and him spoke before and it was like even one time when I was over there and he was asking me questions and it was like..I didn't see what was going on but homeboy was...smart and had his plans together..he knew on the low. And I just didn't see it. But now I realize alright look, there's just certain things you have to be conscious of when you go around and do beats, and I never thought I could be that size of an artist or even be that much. I never considered myself like that, like someone would take my shit and analyze it, you know what I mean? And that's really what was going on to a degree, you know what I'm saying? That's why now when I look back on it, its all good cause we're all here doing our thing. When my album comes out, people are gonna hear it and its gonna be obvious like..."are you influenced by Kanye"...people who don't know, the masses may not know but people in the game know. That's why I don't trip on it and that's why...you know the fact that I'm rhyming on some of my stuff...now the fact that he blew makes it more like "oh you doing this because of him?" And its gonna be clear when I come and do what I do that its two different artists, with much respect for each other and influence on each other, but its like on two different planes, you know what I'm saying? Plus I've been [rhyming] since I was 15, like I had a video and all that when I was 15 and was like birthed into the game as a rapper. It's just a progression that I've been through, so when I do come out and do what I do, its not gonna be a shock cause I'm gonna give people the history, you know what I'm saying? So they'll be like "I seen where he came from and where he's at now." But as far as the soul sampling thing goes, I don't trip off of it, and people who know [rap] know, and I continue to do the type of shit I do, and when they hear how I do it and the way that I do it, they can tell that its in my own format, know what I'm saying? But it doesn't steer me away from using it, like the fact that they blew it up so much its like "oh I can't make beats like that anymore." I don't feel that way, cause I do my shit in my own way, where I feel like you can tell me or his beat, pretty much in the drums, just to get real technical..but I think it will be clear at the end of the day.


Q: To me, you have a lot of big songs under your belt. You done some songs like "The Realest" [Mobb Deep and Kool G Rap]. just independent classics. I remember the joint that was early, Severe and O.C. "Words Can Kill"..

A: Oh yeah...

Q: It was crazy, just a lot of songs like.."Keep It Thoro" [Prodigy] which I consider a classic. When you bang out those joints, do you know like 'This is it? This is gonna be a classic?"

A: Nah...

Q: Even the Jadakiss record "We Gonna Make It." You play it in the club..it was a big record.

A: Yeah...I never know when I'm doing shit. I never know when I'm doing shit. I'll try, you know, to have that feeling but its never a guarantee. I never feel like when I'm done with a song that I'm sure it's gonna work. You still need to get that approval from the world, you know. I got my personal favorites, you know. Like I got beats that I still ain't give nobody yet that I probably have had for a year already that I got faith in em like, 'this is gonna be some shit.' I probably be holding it and not showing certain people cause I didn't wanna like 'nah I gotta do some shit.' And then one day it'll come out and probably will be you know like 'I had that beat for a year.' It happens like that a lot, you know what I mean? Cause I got certain faith in certain beats. But in other occasions I had beats that I had faith in, gave em to the wrong people and it got wasted, and then I'm like 'alright fuck that. Instead of taking that shit in I'm gonna keep it for something special.' And then I'll just keep it on the low until then. A good beat stands the test of time anyway, its not like 'oh its good right now I gotta put it out right now.' That's just a fuckin' flavor of the month beat anyway.

Q: Now with ALC the record label, are you basically like touching out to artists or...

A: Nah, just working with what's around right now trying to get my own self as an artist off the ground first, before I try to tackle the label thing. It's just an opportunity to put shit out without going through all the industry bullshit, whoever is around, not locked into a deal, just feel out a project.

M: Being around Mobb Deep and seeing their situation with Loud [Records], then Landspeed for one album and now Jive, has that colored your impression of what you want to do with your record company? Are you trying to use this as a springboard to maybe get on a major eventually or stay independent?

A: Yeah. I got a company of people around me, a good team of people on that side of things so I just try to stay the producer. I'll bring my two cents when we all come to the table, but on that side of things, I leave things to the team, to build, to enterprise on that side of things and I build the music, the product. It's like a factory, you gotta have people running the factory and you gotta have people on the assembly line. I look at myself..I'm making the shit, so I concern myself totally with making the project, and on the label side of things once the decisions come to the table, I'll give my two cents. But as far as making the whole thing, my mind is still on the music. Little by little I get more into the entrepreneurship every year, you know?

Q: How many records do you got...I know for a fact you got some work with Dilated.

A: Yeah.

Q: "Poisonous"...

A: Oh yeah, yeah.

Q: As far as that joint coming out...like I thought "Marathon" was going to be the single [from Dilated Peoples' new album Neighborhood Watch].

A: Nah, that was never planned to be a single. I don't know if everyone was...using me to be their vehicle..you know spend all their money on this (points to himself). They don't spend the money on me. I feel like I'm true but to the industry I'm still tried and tested and not true yet, you know what I mean? Like I got this degree of proving I still gotta do. And see I gotta make sure I'm not rubbing it in their fucking face after I do it either, cause that just rubs people the wrong way, know what I mean? But I know its gonna be like that, I just gotta..hold my lip when it happens and not be like 'see I told you motherfuckers!' You know, throw shit in people's faces and be like this sour motherfucker, that's just how its gotta be. Even with me being down with Mobb Deep, sometimes I feel their like unsung heroes sometimes, they don't get the shine..It's like- its called 'infamous.' Infamous means famous for being hated, you know what I mean? So there is a degree of power against me and Mobb Deep and anybody that's trying to do what we do, just how it is in life. And then you always have your time to shine though, so its like just the point in the game where I'm at right now it's like that. And people know I'm quiet as kept, and when the opportunity comes for me to be on that stage and make my contribution to do it that big, I'm gonna do it, I'm just not gonna throw it in people's face. Hopefully, I won't be sour at that point, cause everybody has to struggle to get to where they're going and its like at this point I still see that. All the shit I've done and everything its still like labels are followers, they still don't have faith in the artists and their strength and they'll be....know what I'm saying? And its like....it will always constantly be like that and that's why I'm like, when I'm able to work with other artists and shit, you're at the mercy of them, and their management and their label and people who really don't know music. So..it's fucking tough man.

Q: You're very close to Evidence and Confidence right?

A: Definitely.

Q: You lived in the same area together or...

A: We all grew up together knowing each other, went to school together...we all clicked back in the day...we all did shit together, making beats. We all came up underneath Muggs you know, we were always looking up to those people...that's just where it all came from, know what I mean? West Coast..but it was like a different group of west coast producers. Now you got Khalil, Evidence got some shit...a lot of people from the west got some shit. I came from that same school, I just moved to New York.

Q: Do you still get a lot of work out there also?

A: Depends, you know. Hooking up with Snoop and shit that was a good..chapter. I don't think they was even tripping on me like I was from the west, they was like 'Mobb Deep, Alchemist,' know what I mean? They didn't even make the Muggs, Soul Assassins connection..Ras Kass...they was all like I was from New York. I didn't really make my name when I was on the west when I was doing beats...even when I did "Worst Comes to Worst" for Dilated and that was a good record in New York and LA, the Alchemist thing was like 'oh that's Mobb Deep'...Lot of people, even Kurupt, everybody, they thought I was from New York and all that. They didn't know I was Soul Assassins. Cause this is the first time I actually got to do something for Cypress, before that it was like doing work in all these other places, you know what I mean?

Q: You were saying you wanted to get more singles, like the Sheek joint, the "Turn It Up" song..

A: Yeah. Almost. There's all these almost...You can't control that, so if you're your own artist, do your own records, you can control that cause it's your own shit. But just selling beats to everybody ain't no control, unless I make my name like...I'm just not chasing something. I'm only in a race with myself as an artist, I'm not in a race with anyone else in the industry. It's me vs. myself...So, you know, anything can happen. Can't control that. Like I did this record for Pharoah [Monch] that's fucking crazy man. And if they put it out right now, whoever puts it out is gonna pop, it's a single, not an album cut. You can hear it the way that shit be. But for whatever reason, labels, this and that, I can't control that. Maybe that shit will come out and blow and make, you know...or another record I did somebody might come out and blow and set me up, but...I can't wait on that. As an artist I can't put pressure on these labels like 'You gotta put my shit out so I can put my album out in three months...', know what I'm saying? You gotta just keep learning and hope that shit just turns that way.

Q: The thing that kills me is like, a lot of cats be like 'I gotta get this, I gotta have a bigger sound.' But you're still using the ASR-10, what you started off doing.

A: Yeah..I mean...Pro Tools and shit enables you to do a lot, and if you have a good engineer who just knows how to make big sounding records, they can make anything sound good. You gotta remember when Wu Tang was out, putting out grimy shit and those were hit records, you know what I'm saying? Cypress, those beats weren't all like shiny, R&B-sounding records but those were fucking hit records though man. You can't forget what rap is, know what I'm saying? I just think Dre changed it up when he came out with that Chronic 2001 shit man, like...He came from an R&B production world, if you analyze Dre, he came from and R&B world, everything was shiny. Rap came against the grain during that time, it was like gutter. And he did that gutter sound for a while, for the first N.W.A. shit and all that. Then when the Chronic 2001, the second album, not the first Chronic the second one came, it was all replayed shit, it all came from samples but it was all replayed and big sounding. He brought that like that big R&B sound back to rap, and every engineer I go to now, in every big mix, they make your shit bright and big. So its like just a combination of the two. I like that, its just a matter of taking the gritty shit and making it a little bright for today but not R&B-ing the shit out. Cause there's gotta be a separation at some point.

Stay tuned for Part Two to hear Al on Mobb Deep's new LP, some recent collaborations, and his solo album 1st Infantry. Coming soon...

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Biggie bewertet andere Rapper (aus einem alten Interview)


Redman: The new Redman!?! Seven. I can't dis him cuase I know he got skills. He get busy on the lyrics but i can't feel his new sh!t, his new
cosmic crazy shit. I'm used to the clean cut blowout fly nigga. When I met the nigga he was a fly nigga, you know what I'm sayin', now he on some different shit. I really don't like when a rapper come out and they blow up the way they are and they come out again on some changed up shit. To me, that's like getting some good coke from poppy and then getting some money and then be like, fuck that! I'm getting some more 45ths, some brown shit and then bag that up. Why would you change your plan? That's what he did to me.

E-40: No rating! Zero! I don't fuck with duke at all. At all.

Too $hort: Ten. That's my dog right there. I love that nigga. That's my man. The calibre of shit he got. Cocktails shit, i ain't got to see that
shit yet. I know that shit is hot! I was with him in Atlanta and we were just kickin it and shit. That's my dog. I love that man.

Spice 1: Zero. I don't like that guy at all.

Craig Mack: I don't really like him too much either dog. I can't give him a zero though cause he got some hot shit but like five...four, since he on some different shit, some shit I can't relate to. I'm from the hood, he from the suburbs so it's completely different shit. I don't really like the music too much. I like the beats but that (scats) it's not rhymes for me, it's just some pretty kid shit.

MC Eiht: I like Eiht's shit. I give Eiht like an eight. He got some hard shit, some real shit.

DJ Quik: I like the shit on the soundtrack. That's shit is hot. I give him a seven...six.

Snoop Doggy Dogg: Snoopy?? I like Snoop. I give him like an eight. I like his shit.

KRS-One: KRS-One?? Naahhh...I don't like KRS no more cause he just think he's too dope. He let his ego take over his shit and that's what brings him down. When he was like that (shouts "Blow it to yorself"), when he was like that, then he was a ten but now, 'I am Hip Hop'!!! Eat a dick nigga.
Eat a muthafuckin dick!

Guru: Premier?? Umm...who else I give a ten too? I like Keith. Keith's shit is hot.

OutKast: I like them too...six...seven.

Big Mike: Six...Seven

Scarface: Seven...eight. He got some hard shit. Face got some hard shit.

R.A. The Rugged Man: The white boy??!! The one that I did the jam with??? That's who you talkin about? Two...might be a three, I did the song, they paid me a lot of money, that's why I did it. The beat was knockin.

Doctor Dre & Ed Lover: Those are my boys. I just like them niggas, know what I'm sayin. You don't rate niggas. I just like them niggas. They just friends.

Cypress Hill: I used to like them. The first, shit, that first "How i can just kill a man" joint, I was liking that but that new age smoke out shit...fuck it!

New Kingdom: Who? Never heard of them.

Da Brat: I like Da Brat. I like her shit. I give her a nice six. She ain't the dopest female MC but I like her single. I like how she comin'.

The topic of females MC's arrives and Biggie speaks.
"The dopest female MC that has a record deal that's out right now is Rage, but my MC that's coming out, Little Kim, is the dopest female MC that's coming out ever. Ever.
She gets busy like a nigga that's why I like her style. Hard shit! She speaks on suckin dicks..., shooting niggas, real shit that real bitches do that they are just scared to talk about, just how I came out, on some real shit."

Naughty By Nature: I like all of em. I got a relationship with Treach. I got a relationship with Vinnie and I got a relationship with K, but you know what I'm sayin, the music itself it seems that they just wanna make that one hit. Once they got that one hit everything else don't count. That's why I can't dig that. I want a nigga that's gonna be like, 'Yo, I heard an album that's like nine joints I like three, I like maybe the single, the remix. I don't want no album like that.

Coolio: I like that new joint, "Mama I'm In love with a Gangsta". I like that joint. I just like them hard niggas, them niggas that just be leveled out.

Ice Cube: The old one or the new one? Kickiyaya??? It's not the same shit. It's like niggas is changing too much for me and I can't keep the love. I respect the nigga because I know back in the day he used to do his thing so I can't diss him but the new shit right now is....

Dr. Dre: Beats? Incredible!

Ant Banks: I like Banks. I like that whole shit though. Ant Banks shit, the whole Dangerous crew shit.

Sir Mix-a-lot: Nothing! I love his coats. I would love to be in the game like how that nigga get in the game. I wanna be just as large as those fools but get busy, cut the bullshit. Nigga saying...I got millions but
God damn that nigga get on the mic it's just something terrible dog. I just wanna get busy on the mic more than anything. The little nigga game the niggas play with the girls, man! A nigga just throw some bitches inthey shit and they just sit there, like from the "Tootsie Roll" shit to the "Whoot! There it is!" shit. It's the same shit. You get trapped up with these hoes. That shit ain't got nothing to do with hip hop. Nothing!

K-Dee: "The greatest MC in the world"?? I like that track. Nigga don't really be saying nothing to me, you know, like lyrically he don't be saying nothing to me. What make it so bad is when they come out with some shit that's like half ass and like you wonder like, "I wonder how the video will be." And then they got a video with this nigga spinning this bottle and I'm like OK, what's gonna happen when the bottle stops and the bottle is spinning for like three fucking minutes and then it stops and everybody laughs like ha, and he spins again!!! Who directed this? Cube,
it had to be. It's just that funny style shit that I can't fuck with. I like flat on the table shit, like my shit. They try to stick me for my shit I shot em. Period. There's no helicopter scenes with me talkin to somebody like, 'Well, how's the record doing?' There's no shit on there that you could be like why is that shit in there. That's how I like the shit, just regular shit.

Eazy-E: (before his untimely death) - I like Eazy E. Eazy E is a real ill nigga. He's sharp as a tack ontop but rhymin even he knows. He took a group from the hood and just put them on and two million. Bing! He know how to do that shit. Same thing with Luke and all the rest of them niggas.
Man, I just think they take another turn. I can let you hear some Eazy E shit on some old NWA shit and niggas would think Eazy was nice, you know what I'm saying, so he know.

MC Breed: He ain't come out with nothing too wrong for me. I gotta hear some shit. I know once when I was in L.A. I saw Breed at Fattburger and that nigga just took me into the room and just got me smoked out. He had me listening to some ill beats and shit that he work on production too and I didn't know that. That's a plus for MC's. If you can make your own beats you got props because producing is better than being an artist.

Warren G: That's my man. Nigga came to Brooklyn, he came to check me. He just came to hood and shit, pulled up in a little Crysler, jumped out and Warren G was on the ave. drinking Crazyhorse and shit, you know what I'm saying, cause I ain't gonna lie, I ain't going to his hood, staight up!

Wu-Tang Clan/Method Man: Wu-Tang is hot! I like their shit. I love that shit. I like their shit because they have a real I don't give a shit attitude. We in this game to blow the fuck up! We don't give a fuck what happens. All of us is gonna do our thing and we just gonna do it. And they just did it. You can hear punches, you hear so much shit in that album you know damn these guys is not giving a fuck. At the beginning of CREAM, when that shit start!! Voila! Oh my God, this is some rushed shit but I dig it.

The Roots: The Roots album. The Roots album is hot! On the strength, they rock the whole album for a whole hour. I was definetly in dibelief. I like the single, I really did but other people were like, Single was hot but I wasn't paying attention to the album at all.


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Sandman interview


Whats your real name and age?
Onyx Johnson, and i'm 22

Whens "To Whom It May Concern" gonna be out?
Theres no definite date, but around summer 2004

Do you feel its your best work?
So far yeah

Do you like being tha producer, or do you prefer others doing tha beats for you?
I like both, it just depends if i hear beats from other producers that I like then that works too.
Certain vibes i cant create on my own, and thats when I call in other producers

What do you think of Bones new music? Do you think they should go back to they're old style?
I like they're earlier stuff better, but I feel that they matured and changed over time

Will you ever collab. wit Bone?
Yeah

Is there gonna be a single for tha new album?
Ah yeah, the singles called "Let it be known"

Will you make a video for it?
Yeah hopefully in the near future

How come your music was never dropped internationally?
It just takes time, ya gotta get a good deal, and meet tha right people

Who or what inspired you to rap?
N.W.A.

How long have you been in tha game?
I been rappin since I was like 11, I've been makin beats since i was like 14

Why wasn't "Untitled" named?
Just 'cause uh when I wrote tha song, I didn't have a title. Usally when i use that i take something outta tha chorus,
and there was nothin good in tha chrous for it.

Will your group "Dead-N-Gone" ever release an album?
Oh yeah, we got plenty of albums, we got Stone Pilla, Contac, Pms, Six The Prophet, and a group called "Mizled" all releasing albums.
Everybody gonna drop albums back to back, We're gonna also release compilations of tha whole group.

Are you still looking for L.P.'s killers?
Nah, no comment

Where do you see yourself in tha future?
I see myself rich and ownin alotta things, and at least havin 1 platinum album.

Will you ever work with a mainstream artist to get your name out there?
Yeah

What is your favorite album and song of all time? (He took awhile on dis one, lol)
Man, thats a good question, but heres a list of songs:
"Are You That Somebody?" Aaliah
"Mo Murda" Bone Thugs~N~Harmony
"Whom Die, They Lie" Bone Thugs~N~Harmony
"Diary" Alicia Keys
My Favorite Album Is "E. 1999 Eternal"

So lets get onto Hip-Hop. What does it mean to you? How do you feel its been these days? Do you feel as if these cats are keepin it real? Do you think we're missin tha true talents?
Yeah, I think everyone is being molded by tha industry, in order for tha game to change, there needs to be a new type of energy in tha industry, I think minnesota has what tha industry needs.

Does your music come from tha heart or is it what people want to hear?
It's from tha heart, what I wanna hear

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